PIZQQE TWO i Dorothy‘ Dix’ Letter Box What Has a Wife the Right to Expect of_Her Husband? -- Three Stenogs Who Are Dis- gusted With Employers’ Wives -— Is ‘ Life Worth Living? ' 1am!’ JELL-O = .4 The CHARLOTTETOWN clinician Modem "Thriller .Woman,’s Realm -:- Social and Personal --.'-;Fashion's -:- Literate H MARCH]. 193s _ __= re - m WHATEVER ELSE YOU Nero TODAY, MRSGRANI I g1 wmr vou T0 T>Y THE Nsw-JELL-Q Oi-LTHEYVE HIT IT IN A NEW 1. ‘nus i5 ACHANGE- "rue DHZECTIONS SAY use l/Ortuorlsoitiue) ‘ll-HS JELL-O IS Delicious Dcar Miss Dix-The other day the right to expect o fhis wife. a right to expect of her husband. Will you please tell us what a wife has you wrote about what a husband has ALICE. PACKAGE. IT'S a: STEAMING AWAY- MOTHER. 1511111314 I NEVER HAD ANY BEFORE I READY? $EE§6DEARJTHOUGHT R a THAT TASTE" 5° @°°°-’ WATER. THAT HAVE To wur r0 MUST KEEP rue lHEJEi-i-‘Q our nus YES, isn't rue FLAVOUR FLAVOUR FROM nsw-JELCO CAN o0 INTO "rue REFRIGERATOR OR A cool PLACE AS SOON A5 MADE AND TAKES ONLYA LITTLE MORE THAN Answer: Awife has a right to expect FAITHFULNESS. Unless a man nleans to be true to his wife he coin- nlits an unpardonable sill against her by nlarryiilg her. No man has a right to torture a woman by his philandering and to make her see the whole world through the green spectacles of jealousy, nor has he a right to humiliate her by his infldelities til-at make her an object of mingled pity and ridi- cule to all wllo know her. - A wife has a right to expect COURTESY from her husband. Most men seem to consider that nlurriage gives them the privilege of treating their wives with a rudeness that they would not show to a scrub woman, and stiyiilg things to them that they would not dare to say to any woman who had an able-bodied brother to defend her. There are plenty of men wllo check their good nlaniiers on their doorsleps and who consider ma: politeness is not a commodity intended for honlc consumption. A wile has a right to expect COMPANIONSHIP from her husband. That is what a woman marries for. She manles to gct a cheerful, af- fectionate, sympathetic chum. who will have the same interests S118 11115. who will like to do the things she likes to do and who will enjoy her soc- itilj as she will his. A woman has a right to expect her husband to be a FIRESIDE COM- pliiion alld to be willing to spend his evenings in his own home with her. A wile has o. right to expect her husband T0 MAKE SOME SPECI- Pltr EFFORT '1'O MAKE HER HAPPY. Most husbands seem to consider tiiiit Jlial bt-iilg married to them is picnic enough for any woman and that their wives should not crave any greater amusement than cooking up something good for them to cat when they get heme, and seeing that el‘t‘l‘y’llll'llg is made pleasant and Cfllllfy f0!‘ ihem- ' fLL" bawlings out aild give no answer but a sweet smile, they would all be in Reno. What the ivlves should do is to flatter their husbands more at home and give the poor working girl a, chance to get her many tasts com- pleted and not to lrre to spend her time telling the boss that he is so handsome aild that he soon will be in Washington as the hcad oi the Nation-s nfiairs, THREE DISGUSTED STENOGS. Answer: ‘ . Right you are, girls. It, is when the lawfully wedded wife lets up on her job that the office wife gets ill herlnnings if she is a gold-digger or has the odious job of consolcr added to her other duties if she is an honest girl. The theory that so many wives entertain that their husbands‘ sec- retaries are all love pirates bent on breaking up their happy homesiand taking their husbands froln them is so much hooey. Most of the girls have boy friends of their own from ten to twenty years younger than their employers and about fifty pounds slimmer, and they are looking forward to going out on dates with them, not to having supper with the boss. A wile hux. a right to expect MORE OF HER HUSBAND THAN JUST Il|"lt FOOD AND CLOTHES. She earns them over and over again by roll: lll tile home. When she married, her husband took her life into p» slble and to do the little things that break the monotony of household tiiiidgirry and put pep and joy into her day-i- A wile has a right to expect TENDERNESS from her husband, and that he will, at least, give her a sign now and then that he still loves her and docs not regard her as merely a useful household convenience. Every wife has the right to expect her husband TO KEEP UP THE LOVE-NIAKING with which he won her heart after marriage 811d W notice what she wears and when she does her hair a new way and to pay her a few compliments and to give her a kiss once a month, anyway, that has some real thrill and passion it ih istead of being merely a dry peck on the cheek. Every Wlic has the right to expect her husband to show her APPREC- ZIAJIION. The woman who does her duty as wife and mother, who bears a man's children, who slaves to help him get a. start in the world, who 1wineiies and ccoilomizes, who sacrifices herself daily and hourly for it"? family, lays all that she has at a man's feet and he might. 11E 1635i. my "lhanl: you.“ Finally, a wife has the right to expect her husband TO DEAL FAIRLY WITH HER ABOUT MONEY. she has a right to expect him to give her 1-... allowance for running the house and for her. own personal use. 115-11 mlitier of square play. because she is a partner lnthe matrimonial film n11“ anlppwi t.) her share of the profits. Her work is a evaluable as his. She has just as much into the business as he has and she has a right t0 her share of the earnings. DOROTHY DIX- 0 Dear Dorothy Dix-We read every day about the poor 1110111811 W110“ llnsbililtl ls being lured from the straight and narrow path by his stenc- uiitpllcl". What about the poor stcnographer? We have worked iDI‘ f1 ‘s, “and, “H, m‘, has a right m expect him to make H’ as pleasant as don't have to stand for those conceited tiresome old dodoes lifter working pllcr problem is for Fried Wife to give as good service as the stenogra- pher problem is for Friend Wife to give as good service as the stenogra- argument, and if she does not yes-yes her employer and laugh at the right place when he tells stories, and feed him on the flattery for which he is so hungry and for which he begs. whose work was sloppy and who "sassed" her boss and told him what she thought of him would lose her job before the week was over. job of being a wife as the stenographcr does at her task. stuffs, her husband on angels food at home he doesn't go around nibbling on sweets in his office. thinking concerning this thing called life. ditoins? now? Answer: we have had depressions before and we have always pulled out of them, and will do it again. drivers tiliiilbe-r of men and have found them to be egotistical, seillsh slave- critical of our appearance in the office, the expression on our things were easier in the past than they are now and that everything was overdone, but; the way has always opened up for men of ability and energy. faces and numerous titlicr triflcs that we are too busy 7-0 Dal’ 515901319" m- So don't be down-hearted. DOMINION 3'!’ t",\x.\o.\ - ' xt-r: -‘ laimxuln lsnlxn I.\' Till-I l-iioirlrr". rorntl" cal-u (ilililil-l". \._ .\. 11.. 1"“ . a. 1 I - .i....i<~a “Wit-ll . .-..‘.3'..'.‘".\..‘....'..‘f ii» .3....i.i.v in the‘: u‘ l'rol'illt"‘. "MW" .- -'-i.~1' at‘. ......_ u... .H.H.H_m|.r m‘ “Mum Lmmnr" .- Judge ol‘ Prnlinif‘. ,,|— .1,» (manly of ,,,,_,- (‘iinxdrililiv or |I ' ' ' ill' mm" “ $31.1 rouilty. literate person. wiiilili GREETING » ,~ - .315 r l flint: filo Pell- *'3i""i‘*"""? ‘:X'T“""="'i;f:..'.;=.“'"s::.:'.f Fort Jiugusus ll ‘ '~ - sun-mold, nud ll. i'l‘.'lil .5'.\l:l‘f‘l'hf‘(‘. iii‘ (‘llnrioltidolvii ill (Jill-oils (aunts; Mm-Pgflpp ]\ilrrister_ the luxecittnrsho‘ 1|“- nlmvo iiulneil estate lifflll"! l -'\ ., vnnqifln "my 1m 15,q\|l'|| for iii:- pur- ,,,,..,. hnrflilliiiiFr art fol-Iii: You nrc ihorvfiirp 1,'.r,.1,‘v rq-quiri-d tn cite all persona Interns-ted in Iii!‘ said l-I‘ ate , mp1 u» car Iiofore iue at n ‘Pi-nliltiiic (‘ouri ‘up. he livid ill the (‘curt Hung, 1n l'h.'l[iifliil'ir\\\‘l\_. in Queen's Pnuulv, in the sulil Prentice. on l-r - m“. (h, m1...“ fllliriii diiy or March vii-iii i-on\lil1;_ nt the liour of eleven o'clock fiireunou of‘ the sumo viii)’ l" phflw range ii‘ m1." H“? " ‘Th!’ '7'" Am-ouiltx of the said l-‘. iii!‘ should M; 1," pnfifll null the Estate VIFIFFIi m, “rnypd for in amid Petition and on iuofiou of .1. .T. Jrihilsiovi, Esda VFW“ 1m- for said Petitioner. Ami l d" licrolvv order that n true cop)‘ |1“1"‘"r y". ggrihwpi. yuiiiil-iiieil ti. some n|\“v_ql|nf\[\f yiul-lishr-il in (‘liiirloiie- {own nfilrcsiipl IIHPI‘ in eiii-h week for Ill least fnlll‘ vongvr-illiri- weeks from Illi- date hereof‘ rind that u true rot‘! iir-renf be forthwith wistcil ltnl ililf‘ uliliv- laces rr-spcc W’ l‘. “In the "hull of the (‘ourt [loun- In (‘hurlotiniinrn iiforosniil. jlt or nr-nr Hm lloyiil Flank of ffimridii iu (\|,n|-1n(|.-|.nv|| niornsnlil, nud in front "f 11". pull in .\ii.iini Slr-u-nrr Murr- .,,|,1 ma] 1 do Iii-reliy further order ‘lmfn iiui- eopy Iii-roof lu- forthwith n-rreil on lilo i\illll‘lif‘_\‘-fit"llt'i‘lli of 51.1,. Proriin-v, Fo llrnt all persons iii- vrrslml lu iill‘ said Hsliiln as afore- iniil lll.'l_\' liiivo duo vmllro thereof. - If their wives had lo work as hard as we are expected to. take £111 111° The Double Act A Romance of the Theatre BY MARION TOMLINSON Atkinson shrugged his shoulders. "She's always late on principle,” he remarked. At this moment Dolores Monclair came on the stage, bringing with her a wave of heavy exotic perfume. An- tllony rose. "I was Just about to tell the oom- Pfllly." he said firmly, "that mem- bers must make it an invariable rule, without exception, to be at rehearsals on time." Dolores Monclair drew herself up as if to reply haughtlly, then seem- ed to change her mind and smiled bewitchlngly at the author. “It's a rule I always make for my- self. I never keep people waiting," she said carcsslngly, "but this morn. ing my ear was held up in Oxford Street for hours, simply hours. I'm so sorry. Please forgive me!" Atkinson looked non-plussed, then IF you’rc troubled with distress from stomach, g a s, a n d your blood becomes poisoned, til c r e is ul\'I-J.\' umlnr uiv Iiiui-i and Sea] itf ||l|~ shill (‘nvirl this ref; . _ n, s.) 20th u"; or i-‘elirimrv 1- ‘ A. Ii. 101v: iimi h. iilr- "Ii g-rivti ills .\l:lj"l1|_v':t i ' reign. . ,s,»,i.> 17.1. V‘\Y.‘.l'-‘.R I Judge ol’ Pruliiiliti, 3240 I 2i Tue 4 , i’ and you will succeed. behind the lashes was not one of anger and resentment. Dolores was amused and contemptuous. took the chair her, she turned inquirlngly toward Secretly they generally consider their employers fat, fussy old men For The Cook i LAMB CAKE One and one-half cups sugar, 1,, cup shortening, 1 cup milk, 3 cups cake flour, 4 teaspoons baking pow- der, ‘~< teaspoon salt, 4 egg whites, Biiflll‘ beaten. Cream shortening and sugar, add milk and altemilto with sifted dry ingredients, Fold 111 6kg whites. Pour into well greas- ed lainb mold and bake in 325 dc- grees F, oven for 1 hour. Then turn of! gas aild leave cake in oven for 15 minutes longer. Then remove from mold and allow to cool. Cover with white frosting and sprinkle who doirt know how to dance and whose conversational line is a flop, and instead, of envying their wives they pity them. ‘Thank goodness, they hours. Alid you are right in saying that the remedy for the wile-stenogrn- VARJETIES enough that; she will be fired if she does not keep herself neat and tidy 0F TOAST and pleasing to the eye, and if she does not do her work efficiently, and Homestead tea toast-Thin slices if she does not accept rebuke and criticism with humility and without toast, spread with shortening Any stenographer who came to work looking slovenly and unkempt, Any wife could keep her husband if she would work as hard at the l When a wonlilil VDOR/OTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dix-I am a. young man 25 years old and have done much Is life really worth carrying n now or in the future considering the trend oi’ business and living coil- What chance has a young man with limited capital to start on THE OBSERVER. Of course, things are pretty bad now and the ouLlook is gloomy, but Everygeneratloil of young men has thought that creamed with brown sugar. Place a small spoonful! very heavy cream on each, place in oven or under broiler until cream melts into the toast. Serve hot. in small animal shapes with fancy cookie cutters. Spread with shorten- ing. Serve with hot milk, poured over it at the last milluto. ana. spread with shortening. baking pan in hot oven until lightly browned. Canadian cheese, add minced green Pepper and prepared mustard and mayonnaise. bread, spread with shortening. Cut in triangles, set in hot oven 5 mlzl- with white cocoanut to resemble wool. Two raisins for eyes, a small piece of red maraschino cherry cut. for the mouth. Tie a ribbon with small bell around the neck. Mount frosted lamb on an oval platter sur- rounded with paper grass. Nursery milk toasPCut the toast Banana toast —- Place sliced ban- bctween two slices bread, Place in Piquilnfltrlanglcs - Mash yellow i opzfieelgs ‘By Annabelle . ~\ ...\ \\_\\\. \ . .\\\*\s\ A BIG IMPROVEMENT 5 minufar offer mall/o ’ old-ffas/lionedje/li/ powder awn o/dJflM. qoodas/i‘ no"! Jfll-DZ i i i Still steam/liq] Hqi/our escopinq/ Seitirlq de/aqed/ 5secorralr rite/marry IVEW JEUIQ - Into t/ve refi/qerafor/ Flax/our srz/ed/ ' Satin/q bequn/ What the Fashionables are Wearing Worthington silk made the original. It is ex-i tremely youthful and wearable. A crinkly wool crepe in navy blue with slate blue would be exceed- ingly attractive. Black crinkly crepe silk with yel- low crepe would be stunning. Printedicrepe silk with plain ton- ing crepe, or carried out in one colour as carrot-red crepe silk would be other good mediums. Style No. 502 is designed for sizes 14, 16, is, 20 years, 36, 88, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 3d requires 3% yards 39-inch. with 1% yards 39-inch contrasting. Price of Pattern i5 cents in gmmpa or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. Address . . . . . IIOIICI a State. City ‘And Just imagine nl; possibilities it has for contrasting effects, so modish this season. Spread on slices of lites. Good hot or cold. Tomato toast - Heal. canned Two shades of grey crinkly crepe tomatoes, season with salt, pepper and little sugar. Spread sliced bread toast with shortening, cover with APPly OVOI throat and choo- —swnllow small pieces of- COUGHS F4 MomingSmi-l-U The hotel-clerk was astonished to see a. guest parading through the foyer in a. pair of pajamas. "Here, what are you doing?" ‘ The guest snapt out oi’ it and apologized: ‘ "Beg pardon. I'm a somnambu- list." "Well," sneered the clerk, "you con’t walk around here like that. no matter what your religion is." Husband and wife were prepar- Put your heart and your back in your work‘ DOROTHY DIX. smiled cynically behind his_ hand. "So young Carson is marked out as her next victim, is he?" he thought. "Oh well, honey for files." Anthony bowed non-committally, which was evidently less of a. res- ponse than Dolores required, for she looked about her with suddenly angry CYCS. "Thcres no chair for me lo sit on, now I'm here," she complained. | "Boy, give me your chair!" the part!" Her words might have been in- terpreted as encouraging, but not her voice. 30591111113’. as she turned away, 1°" Suddenly self-conscious and alone. She saw that Dolores viewed h" Wm‘ i‘ mlflfiling of emotions. On the one hand she was not ill- pleased that a seeming amateur had been given the role next in import- ance to her own. Yet, though ama- Rosemary started at being ad- gifsszgldbeleazgy minuzuluted by dressed, then, remembering her role other peoplegwori 2r f‘ smiling she‘ rose with alacriiy and brought! glory or onys own t ihgremer the chair she had been sitting on magnolia m that b’ if‘ 1 18y are well out into the light. Dolores did tude they may “mm: “e rnncept" not co “ it necessary to thank on“ own Caren!“ n i”: germ“ her, but, noting the boy's ragged m,“ y “c B’ c" garments she looked up at him sur- ' the company. listened enthralled. She had not yet known more of it than her own lines which, typed apart from the context, had not had their fllll significance to her. Now, 118 Anthony swung into the big scene between the mother and her repudiated son in the third act, Rosemary held her breath. She saw that Anthony had written n really big play. ' Rosemary shivered a little and CHAPTER XXV. TI-IE FIRST REHEARSAL Dolores Monclnir swept her fam- ous long lashes over Rosemary as she had done once before in Gre- noble's office. But this time the ex- pression of the brilliant black eyes As shc lfiosemary offered 1101M"; $0‘ 800d as Anthony Carson. , n" wad,‘ ‘ n‘ “tanthccielliye-had been watching the das t., IJJllifi0l1,ITO'fl$.],a;';y:f2 whlgig ijyliixgeihletpfigt bguAltfhlfVhliaiI- r 2'1 ' ' U Om IIIUC Eifiéfrirli ,,,'3;,";",:,1:;:;; "$3175; "igff 3,13,; "°""’" .,.,....... . - Pr» n," ,0 n“ rum.‘ ‘cu-h. “h,” "Did you say he is trying the rar‘. Syrup d" U- I» for In; Iolhal gllvlog, ,Mr. Carson?" rho cried. "Why, no is Anthony began to read his pla prised, and Rosemary, smiling and R y’ P13?- slightly, looked hill int n. e f °‘°m“"y'"°m "he" ‘he “°°° her m“ ° ° °Y s ° i lithe hall’ light behind the rest o; lier Five Qhildren lltul lieavy (Soils llrl. iii’. Arsenault, Kanslngton, P.E.I., writes:- ‘ "I am the mother of flv children, and last winter I tried all kinds of medicine, but none seemed Norway Pino Syru and their colds liml noon dis- Prlce 35c. a bottle; largo family alzofioe- ot nll and general atom’ put up only by o 'l‘. urn Co. m. col-onto. on. fried sausages and plenty of hot tomato. to herself, feeling Dolores’ eyes persistently upon her. There was, indeed, a calculating look be- hind the half lowered lashes of the actress. She's thinking how she can take that scene away from me, thought Rnsenlary. She sees it was written to carry the audience with the boy, not with the woman. She'll "kl1l" me it if she can. Worl‘ upstage so that I'll have to give my nest lines turned away from the house, no doubt. Plenty oi’ things she can do she's an old hand at it, and I've no special protection against her as I had in "Berenice." Well, I'll have to prevent her shifting the focus from the boy to the woman, for if she does it shoill spoil Anthony's Rosemary smiled slightly, and Dolores, who had not troubled to turn her eyes away when she saw the boy was aware of her scrutiny, smiled a sweet and disarming smile in return. She thinks I will be an easy vic- tim, thought Rosemary. I'm really taking an unfair advantage of her. She under-estimates my knowledge of the stazc. while I don't under- estimate her powers in the least. That makes me the stronger to be- gin with anyway. i good. At last I got Dr. Wood '| ai or it tho best cough medicine lug to go out. Looking up, he saw "Well," he asked, "what's the mat- ter?” ' "I say, dear," she said, “you nevel look so smart in your clothes as you used to ten years ago." He shrugged his shoulders. “That's very strange," he re- turned, becauso they are the same clothes." UPTON SCHOOL Report for month or February: Grade X-l. Grace Betton; Jean Button; 3. Maud Taylor. Grade IX—1. John Maeleah. Grade VIII—l. John Benton. Grade VI--l. Margaret Bctton, 2. Gordon MacSwain: 3. Elsi: Turner. ' Grade IV—1. Svend Christensen; 2. Roddie Betton; 3- Mildred Mac- Swain. ' I Grade IfI—l. Florence Mac- Swain. Perfect attendancez-Mauo - Taylor, Margaret Betton. lifary MacKay, Teacher iiuivering Nerves Steadied and Sootlied by Lydia E: Pinkham’: ' Vegetable Compound “My mother used to take Lydia E. _ Pinkham’: Vegetable Compound and she gave it to me. I am now the mother of three small children. Lani winter I was nervous and run down. Four bottles of the Compound gave ma strength. I can do all my work now and trike care of the childrenW-Mac. VICKS .floor2lxlfi.fin?ln?ua - Your Anthony had finished the leading of the play and there were mur- murs of applause among the as. semblecl actors, all or whom were thinking exclusively of their own parts. If they thought of the play as a whole at all, it was only m speculate on how long it; would run, and so keep them in work, Rosemary, no longer noticed by Bllyfine, stood silently in" the shad- ows, and watched the people she was to work with. On the complet- ion of the reading Dolores had gone up to Anthony, and was, by right or stardom. taking up his exclusive at- tention, praising the play effuslvely. Rosemary saw the young playwright wince once or twice. Evidently Dol- ores llad praised the wrong thing. "It's a. great success in America," said a thin young actor with.a sen- sitive face who stood near Rose- mary. She realized he was talking to her: "I only hope it runs as well here. It will mean something to have a shop for a while. I've been flbliflllliely on my uppers. You too, eh? Been out long?" He looked at the shabby clothes °1 the WY. and wondered ii’ it was true, as the company whispered, that he was only an amateur. If so, Anthony Carson was mad, and im- Derllling the success of his play, 110i W Speak oi’ their chances of con- tinued work. "Yus, I ain't weeks." said the youngster. The sensitive young man 51111.1. dered, and looked with an appalled Expression at tho other: of the cllmlmlly. who had gathered cur- lmlflly to sec this find of Carson's who was to have a "fat" part. "My Godi" ‘said the young mm, "M": without attempting to dis- IW" "w avail". m lnlllilhcd her gazing rather inten\tly at his clothes. ‘ad nothing fer N. GIGUIJIIE, 58M Chabot 86., Mon- treal, Quebec. group abouifRosemary. “Where have you worked before, kid?" he asked bluntly. (To be Continued.) hand to his head. He himself had a beautifully faked Oxford accent. "I always say one can't be too care- ful of ones speech," he was wont to , tell people when complimented on the purity of his decision. "The A tailor says that P1l15'f°"1'5 a” English theatre is, or should be, the11°55n8 Hvvr- 0n their 111st less? repository of beautiful English "Q7115 15 a rich mall's 85m” speech." says an authority. But we have nleb ‘file comedian, a short m: man some very c001‘ players- wlth a hearty manner, Joined the FOR GROWING CHILDREN f! Glowmo children need a rich supply of vimminsfto assure present health and to develop sound bodies that will be resistant to disease throughout a lifetime. N BYEAST MAKES is specially rich in vitamins. .~ . for i: istbcworld’: ricbcstyaasl (bx-ewers’ yeast), dried and flaked.- As a natural laxative and a health- _ builder, it is valuable to both child- ren and adults. Give i: to your fam- ily regularly every day. It keep! il1~ . definitelyAtgrooerfmd druggists’. alCh BRiWlRS YEAST YEASTN i-LLAKES lricin run cotton (Soedmnmyvio: common) coucnanlmn nnwnv vum TJU-NATIUNAL IIIIIIIII LINVITID. IIONTRHAL / mu 4mm anew u. nrmlus a coin-nor. mama». "1"", \ i l I l ‘in. Illoliloli-lllll.I444_§*§bii-JJIIJIJfllitlltlltlllltillllil,‘ it